A drama based on law about money, love and passion. It is about
lobbying, rebating, connecting and corruption of the Korean society
through Lee Cha Don who loses everything because of money.

Lee Cha Don is a man who rises to the seat of a special branch
prosecutor with the money of a loan shark, while Bok Jae In is the
daughter of the loan shark who raises Lee Cha Don.

Type: Scripted

Languages: Korean

Status: Ended

Runtime: 70 minutes

Premier: 2013-02-02

Incarnation of Money - Kang Ji-hwan - Netflix

Kang Ji-hwan (born Jo Tae-gyu on March 20, 1977) is a South Korean
actor. He began his career in musical theatre, and has since starred in
television dramas such as Be Strong, Geum-soon! (2005), Capital Scandal
(2007), and Hong Gil-dong (2008), as well as the films Rough Cut (2008)
and My Girlfriend Is an Agent (2009).

Incarnation of Money - Contract disputes - Netflix

In 2010, Kang was sued for breach of contract by his former talent
agency Jambo Entertainment. Kang had signed with S-Plus Entertainment
after asking to be released from his contract with Jambo, which the
latter claimed was still valid for eight months. S-Plus stated that of
the six years that Kang was with Jambo, he was without a contract for
three years, and after receiving no response from their overtures
regarding Jambo's “unfair terms,” they took steps to legally terminate
Kang's contract. Upon mediation, the Corea Entertainment Management
Association (CEMA) instructed Kang to suspend his entertainment
activities for eight months, but when he starred in Coffee House anyway,
CEMA members threatened to boycott him unless he dropped out of playing
the leading role in Faith. In 2012, S-Plus Entertainment moved to extend
Kang's contract with them for an additional eight months, citing his
lack of projects for that same length of time due to CEMA's edict. When
Kang refused and began entrusting his business affairs to his lawyer,
S-Plus sued him for breach of contract. In 2013, the Seoul Central
District Court dismissed the lawsuit and upheld the validity of the
original contract; the court also ordered S-Plus to pay Kang ₩5 million
in damages after the agency defamed him in the press.